“i was realizing that maybe recovering wasn’t as bad as i made it seem, and maybe being able to go to school again, having friends again, it kind of reminded me of the life i was missing out on, and i realized that i really did want to get back to it.”
rachel had to work back up to being able to eat solid foods. the first step in their recovery was not needing a feeding tube, and when they achieved that, the experience was difficult.
“i felt like i wasn’t sick anymore. i thought the tube was the only thing to prove i was still sick, so that was really difficult just getting over that mental block of, ‘i have to eat again and somehow feel good about myself for it.’”
rachel continued to make new goals surrounding food, like eating full meals without needing a replacement, speaking to a therapist about the mental aspect of their ed, and getting diagnosed for other mental illnesses they had when they were young but were never given proper diagnoses.
“i was finally able to get the proper medication for my different mental illnesses, and that helped a lot,” they said.
for the medication to work, rachel had to get their weight up, because certain antidepressants won’t work if someone is too underweight. while that piece was challenging for their body image, it allowed them to get on medication they had needed for so long, which made things much easier to cope with.